LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 7, 2000 -3 Several stalkers target female victim Several subjects followed a woman from her listed residence on Maynard Street to the Varsity Tennis Center on State Street on Dec. 29, Department of Public Safety reports state. The woman reported an ongoing stalking problem with these subjects. DPS advised the woman to call the Ann Arbor Police Department to report the stalking. Student receives harrassing e-mail A male student received a harassing email message which hie reported to DPS on Monday. The student returned the message requesting the e-mail harassment to stop. DPS reports state the caller has not received any additional threatening e-mail messages. Arboretum gate 0 lock heisted A Nichols Arboretum worker found that a lock was missing from the Nichols Drive gate to Nichols Arboretum, DPS reports state. The lock was stolen sometime before 7 a.m. on Monday. Woman breaks window for purse A woman broke a window to her office in the Art and Architecture Building on Dec. 29 to retrieve a purse she left inside, DPS reports state. The woman left her purse in the office and was then locked out of the building. DPS directed the woman to contact maintenance for window repair. Purse stolen from * Kellogg Center A woman reported that her purse was stolen sometime between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. on Dec. 27 from the Kellogg Eye Center, according to DPS reports. The woman said she did not report the theft immediately because she checked home first before reporting it stolen. The caller's drivers license, check book, credit card and $1.50 were among the items in the black leather purse. DPS reports state there are no suspects or witnesses. Subjects solicit in West Hall Arch Two men were begging for money in the West Hall arch and were "pushy" according to DPS reports. After being dispatched to the scene, DPS discovered the two men were try- ing to stay out of the cold. Parking structure gates broken A parking gate was destroyed at the parking structure on East Medical Center Drive early Saturday morning, DPS reports state. The gate was appar- ently rammed with a car. On Wednesday, another parking gate at the same structure broke and fell onto a car, DPS reports state. Towel catches fire in East Qaud A resident of East Quad Residence Hall was forced to put out a fire in her room Wednesday afternoon, DPS reports state. The small blaze began when a towel caught fire. No damage was reported, Arbor Heights resident missing A female resident of Arbor Heights Correctional facility has been truant since Sunday evening when she was expected to return to Arbor Heights, DPS reports state. The suspect did not return after visiting family. Man attempts larceny at UGLi A woman at the Shapiro Undergraduate Library was the target of an attempted larceny Tuesday, DPS reports state. The woman was returning to the coat that she had left on the third floor when she observed a male suspect with his hands in the coat's pockets. The suspect left when he saw her, -Compiled by Daily Staff Reporters David Enders and Caitlin Nish.a Bioinformatics program gets $4 million By Shabnam Daneshvar Daily Staff Reporter The University Medical School will receive $4 million during the next four years from the Washington D.C.-based Hugh Howard Medical Institution to support biomedical research. Forty-one schools received financial allotments from the institution, but only three of them, includ- ing the University, the University of California at Los Angeles and Yale University, received the top award amount of $4 million. The Medical School will use the funds to sup- port its new program in bioinformatics, one of the new areas of focus for the University's upcoming Life Sciences Initiative. Joseph Perpich, vice president for Grants and Special Programs of HHMI, said the University presented an "extremely superb and compelling proposal in terms of bioinformat- ics" compared to the other 140 schools that applied, he said. "Michigan had one of the best proposals. They addressed the shortage of training within the (Human) Genome Project and can definitely play a role in the future of bioinformatics for the 21st Century," he said. To University officials including Michael Savageau, chair of the Medical School's depart- ment of microbiology and immunology and the director of the bioinformatics program, the grant has been no less than "God sent" "The grant will enable us to hire four new junior faculty members, renovate the research space" and set up several pilot programs between biological and computational scien- tists, he said. The interaction between technology and bio- medicine will then enable the University to study further and advance their research in endeavors like the Human Genome Project. Advances like the Project have allowed sci- entists to scrutinize individual cells and learn more about the genome, piece by piece. But very little is known of the overall interaction between individual parts and patterns in bio- logical sequences. "HHMI funding will help us obtain the comput- er technology and expertise we need to develop the next generation of bioinoformatics tools," said Medical School Dean Allen Lichter. "We are aiming to educate the next genera- tion of scholars in this field also. That is a major focus," Savageau said. The research also will strive to "take a global view at the expres- sion of the entire organism" as opposed to looking at pieces of the puzzle or individual cells, he added. Previous grants from the University Health System and the Ann Arbor Warner Lambert-Parke Davis organization already have helped fund reno- vations on a 5,000-square foot area in the Medical School and five research laboratories for the bioin- formatics faculty. The initiative also offers graduate educa- tion, including seminars and interdisciplinary doctorate's and master's degree programs are underway. "We are hoping to be a leader in this and the grant from HHMI gives us a jump in developing the program,"over other universities also pursuing the field, Savageau said. Back to the drawing board Off-campus housing fair to aid in A2 apartment crunch By Tiffany Maggard Daily Staff Reporter Students who pursue off-campus housing must rely on links from a variety of different, often unrelated, sources to find vacant dwellings, especially after the academic year is well under way. University Housing will offer last- minute house seekers an efficient means of uncovering available housing for the 2000-01 academic year Monday when it will host the 13th annual Off- Campus Housing Fair from 2p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Michigan League Ballroom. The housing fair is an opportunity for students to find housing and avoid exhaustive hours searching the Web, calling rental companies and hunting down listings posted on restroom walls. In years past, the event has attracted nearly 700 students. A total of 37 landlords, vendors and housing organizations will be present at the fair to showcase housing vacancies and schedule appointments with stu- dents to see available locations. "It's a centralized opportunity for stu- dents to meet with landlords all in one place at one time instead of getting caught up in phone tag and e-mails," said University Housing Adviser Amy Starr, who is helping to organize the event. Starr added that students will have the opportunity to speak directly to rental company owners rather than through secretaries. The Ann Arbor Tenants Union also will be present to assist students in their problems with landlords and manage- ment companies when issues including lack of privacy and on-going mainte- nance problems arise. The Ann Arbor Area Apartment Association will assist students in find- ing custom living quarters. Students looking for more unique living situations such as sharing a home with a local family, can find opportuni- ties with Homeshare. With so many tangible resources that the fair provides, Starr said that "there is a level of expertise that's hard to cap- ture than if you're going from place to place" in search of housing. But despite all of the available resources, fair-goers should expect some limitations. Local rental companies agree that the best time to seek out homes for four to seven people is early in the fall. "Students are now looking before exams and before the snow starts falling," said Jani Platz at Prime Student Housing. "In general, I think that students are just getting smarter - planning ahead." CMB Management employee Mandy Brown agrees that many larger listings have already been taken, but is confi- dent that it is not too late for students to find places to live. "It's not at all too late to find housing for fall. But we're getting to the point where we have mostly 2-bedroom (apartments) left. But we have 18 build- ings with available listings," she said. Companies like .CMB and Prime have found the housing fair a successful means of filling up their vacancies in the past and said that it is a good alter- native to less personal means of com- municating with potential tenants. "I think that (the Housing Fair) isbet- ter. Not only do we talk to the students in person, but we can show them pic- tures of our listings," Brown said. LSA juniors Katie Hardwick and LeAnn Winkler agree the Housing Fair is a good alternative to the normal battle to find affordable housing on campus. "I think it would be easier to talk to landlords in person instead of leaving message after message at rental compa- nies," Hardwick said. Hardwick and Winkler contemplated a protest against the difficulty of find- ing suitable housing on campus. "We thought about camping out on the president's lawn and in the Law Quad to make a statement, Winkler said. JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily United Students Against Sweatshops organizer Eric Brakken makes a sign for the national group's protest planned for today at 2 p.m. USAS intends to march on the Fleming Administration Building to urge the University to sign the Worker Rights Consortium. Mi~chgtSa ls hbd to host debate Dow Coning asks for appeal LANSING (AP) - Michigan State University lost its bid yesterday to once again host a presidential debate. But Michigan's importance in the presidential race could mean voters will get a chance to see more in-state debates after Monday's GOP face-off in Grand Rapids. Political consultant Tom Shields said the six Republican presidential candi- dates might agree to a second Michigan debate before the state's Feb. 22 GOP presidential primary. All six have agreed to participate in Monday evening's debate at Calvin College, which follows a GOP debate at the University of New Hampshire last night and one today in Columbia, S.C. "I wouldn't be surprised to see anoth- er debate in Michigan before the prima- ry, maybe in the Detroit media market. Even in a Republican primary, you still have 50 percent of the vote there," said Shields, of Marketing Resource Group in Lansing. Democratic officials said they'd wel- come a debate in Michigan between Vice President Al Gore and former U.S. Sen. Bill Bradley before the state's March II presidential caucuses. But they're not expecting to host one. "We'd like to, but there is such a small window between Iowa and New Hampshire and our caucus," said state Democratic spokesperson Dennis Denno. Michigan State University had hoped to be one of three sites chosen by the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates to host a fall debate between the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates. The commission announced Thursday that this year's debates will take place at the John F. Kennedy Library and University of Massachusetts in Boston on Oct. 3, Wake Forest University in Winston- Salem, N.C., on Oct. 1 i and Washington University in St. Louis on Oct. 17. A vice-presidential debate will be held on Oct. 5 at Centre College in Danville, Ky. In 1992, the East Lansing university hosted the last of three debates between Bill Clinton, George Bush and Ross Perot. Washington University also host- ed a debate in 1992, and Michigan State had hoped to copy the St. Louis school's success at getting a return engagement. But Michigan State's bid didn't make the final cut. Although presidential candidates in both parties are now focused on Iowa and New Hampshire, they recognize Michigan could play a huge role if chal- lengers pull off early upsets and Michigan becomes a last stand for some candidates, said David Rohde, Michigan State political science profes- sor. "The way that George Bush's nomi- nation could unravel, if it's going to unravel ... (is to) lose in New Hampshire and lose again in Delaware," Rohde said. If that happens and U.S. Sen. John McCain does well in South Carolina and his home state of Arizona, he could conceivably win Michigan, possibly derailing Bush for good. Bush still holds a sizable lead over McCain in recent Michigan polls. But the Texas governor earlier this week agreed to handle another commitment by phone so he could take part in Monday's debate. Steve Forbes, Gary Bauer, Alan Keyes, Orrin Hatch and McCain also will participate. McCain plans to hold a town hall meeting Monday afternoon at Hope College in Holland before the debate, while Forbes will stop in the Grand Rapids suburb of Wyoming on Monday morning to call for more school choice. DETROIT (AP) - Dow Corning Corp. and lawyers for women who sued the company over silicone breast implants appealed yesterday for a federal judge to over- turn a ruling they said could unravel the complicated set- tlement plan. The appeal asks U.S. District Judge Denise Page Hood to throw out federal Bankruptcy Judge Arthur Spector's Dec. 21 ruling letting women who voted against the $3.2 billion set- tlement to sue Dow Corning's corporate parents. The settlement had barred further lawsuits against Dow Chemical and Corning Corp. over silicone implants. That clause is among keys to the settlement, part of a $4.5 billion bankruptcy reorganization plan for Dow Corning. , Dow Corning and the Tort Claimants Committee - repre- senting thousands of women.with silicone implants the com- pany once made - had called Spector's ruling confusing and a potential catalyst of more litigation. The company and the claimants committee has called the "third-party release" clause "fundamental" to the settlement plan overwhelmingly approved after years of contentious negotiations. "Without the third-party release, there is no closure of breast implant litigation against our shareholders or Dow Corning," Gary Anderson, Dow Corning's chair and chief executive, said in a statement yesterday. To him, the settlement plan as filed "provides a fair and equitable way for women with breast implants to have their day in court." "Both the TCC and Dow Corning are committed to resole ing this last remaining issue so that we can rapidly implemem the (settlement plan) and begin processing and payment (9 claims as soon as possible," said Ralph Knowles of the claimants committee. Spector ruled last month he lacked the power to relea@ Dow Chemical and Corning, and that the plan didn't appea designed to grant such a release anyway. Dow Corning dis puted both points. Spector's opinion also said women who voted to approve the settlement would be barred from suing the companies. Itz unclear how many women his opinion might affect; 112,774 women voted on the plan last year, with 94 percent approv- ng. RunnIng Out,,, Taking the April MCAT? Classes start tomorrow for the nation's best MCA T test preparation! The Princeton Review 1-800-2REVIEW www.review.com Mvichigani Womeh's Uasketball 14. w. -W w ; :., ' l .,i -1 r,,.,. ,. <., . , "' . ' rte' "..:: MICIIAN jai